Monday, August 19, 2024

Mass Dems descend on Chicago

Presented by Uber: Kelly Garrity's must-read rundown of what's up on Beacon Hill and beyond.
Aug 19, 2024 View in browser
 
Massachusetts Playbook logo

By Kelly Garrity

Presented by 

Uber

CHI-TOWN CATTLE CALL — Today marks the official kick off of the Democratic National Convention, but Massachusetts Democrats got the party started yesterday.

Gov. Maura Healey barely made it off the tarmac yesterday after touching down in the Windy City before local TV crews caught up with her about the week ahead. Not long after, she and Democrats from across the region gathered for a New England delegate welcome party (with many from Massachusetts sporting their matching Comma-La custom Converse), hosted by California Congressman (and regular New Hampshire campaigner) Ro Khanna.

Democrats are heading into the week still riding high on the rush of energy Vice President Kamala Harris has brought to a campaign that until last month was expected to be a somewhat sleepy redux of the 2020 cycle. But beyond the good vibes the campaign is trying to extend, there’s plenty worth watching this week. Here’s three things Massachusetts Democratic strategists and delegates are looking out for this week:

PARTY PROBLEMS: Democrats across the political spectrum have been uncharacteristically in array since Harris replaced President Joe Biden at the top of the Democratic ticket, and this week’s festivities should help extend the sugar high the new ticket has been riding. But protests over Israel’s war in Gaza (there’s at least six major ones planned targeting the convention) could disrupt the sense of solidarity.

“I'm going to be looking for any signs of disunity in the party. I have not spotted any thus far, but I think the party is remarkably united, and I'm hoping that the divisions within the party around Israel and Gaza won't become a big problem for us,” former MassDems Chair Phil Johnston told Playbook. “I'm looking ahead 90 days — when you think globally, that could be a big problem if it were to blow up.”

David Seaton, one of the youngest members of the Massachusetts delegation to the DNC, is watching Harris’ speech to see “how she plans to differ her policies from the policies of Joe Biden,” he said.

“One thing that our generation of delegates and people across the country have been calling for is some form of change in our party and in policy from the administration, particularly around the war in Gaza,” Seaton said.

Disruptions and protests already began last night in Chicago, and in Boston, activists took to Boston Common to protest from afar.

MASSACHUSETTS MATTERS: Deep-blue Massachusetts may not draw many campaign rallies, but many Democratic campaigns are built on the Bay State’s political talent and policy proposals. So are Democratic presidential administrations.

“Presumably there's a lot of people there having discussions about a potential Harris administration, and what potential roles everybody and their brother and sister from Massachusetts will be filling in that administration, as we always do,” longtime Democratic strategist Scott Ferson said.

And one policy area that could make it from Massachusetts into the national conversation: child care, Revere City Councilor Juan Jaramillo told Playbook.

“The thing that we’re leading on currently is child care,” Jaramillo, who’s serving as a DNC delegate, said, pointing to the investments in the state’s FY25 budget. “Massachusetts leadership on the issue can really be an example for the rest of the country, and of course, the convention being that opportunity to highlight that.”

THE BIG SPEECHES: Only a few weeks in, the Harris campaign has run more on vibes than promises. The convention stage — vice presidential pick Tim Walz will speak Wednesday and Harris will speak Thursday, as is custom for the nominees — will give them a chance to further define themselves and the campaign.

“I’m watching Walz’s speech and how he defines himself beyond the ‘everybody's dad,’ pitbull attack on JD Vance. Does he really talk about his values in a way that doesn't allow him to be painted as the most liberal governor in the country?” Ferson said.

GOOD MONDAY MORNING, MASSACHUSETTS. Send your tips, scoops and Malort reviews my way: kgarrity@politico.com. And keep scrolling for more on what to expect this week at the DNC.

TODAY — Lt. Gov. Kim Driscoll chairs an emergency shelter commission meeting at 1 p.m. in Boston.

CONVENTION ZONE

WHAT TO WATCH (AND WHEN) DNC organizers are keeping the speaker schedule for this week’s primetime programming at the United Center close to the vest, but you’ll be able to find tonight’s rundown later this morning on POLITICO’s liveblog (where you can also follow the latest from CNN-POLITICO Grill). Here's what we know so far:

— Tonight’s headliners: President Joe Biden is expected to get a hero’s send off during his speech tonight. Dr. Jill Biden will also take the stage, as will former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton. Former First Lady Michelle Obama, former President Barack Obama, and Second Gentleman Doug Emhoff will take the stage Tuesday, as will Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker. VP nominee and Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz is up Wednesday with former Speaker Nancy Pelosi, former President Bill Clinton and Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg. Harris takes the stage Thursday. At least one Republican, former Illinois Rep. Adam Kinzinger, is also on the list for Thursday, CNN reported.

— Where to catch Massachusetts pols: At least one Bay Stater will take the stage at the United Center: Gov. Maura Healey. She has a speaking slot Thursday night, according to a person familiar with the planning. Healey has a packed week; today she’ll be on a LGBTQ+ Caucus panel with Colorado Gov. Jared Polis, and is set to attend meetings with the labor council, small business, climate crisis and environmental caucuses. And she’ll be a part of the panel with the seven other Democratic women governors hosted by “Veep” star Julia Louis-Dreyfus Wednesday.

Boston Mayor Michelle Wu is set to speak at the Vermont Democrats breakfast this morning at the Palmer House hotel, and is scheduled to cohost the MassDems breakfast Wednesday. She’s also joining the Democratic Mayors Association as part of the AANHPI Mayors and Leaders reception Tuesday, and is expected to speak at an affordable housing event with other mayors this week.

— Who’s coming to breakfast: If you can rally for the 7:30 a.m. (CT) start of the MassDems daily breakfast program, you’ll be able to hear top Democrats from Massachusetts and around the country. Healey, Lt. Gov. Kim Driscoll, Attorney General Andrea Campbell, Sens. Elizabeth Warren and Ed Markey, Reps. Katherine Clark and Lori Trahan, Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg, Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro, Connecticut Sen. Chris Murphy and Maryland Rep. Jamie Raskin are all on the list to address the delegation over what’ll likely be copious amounts of coffee at the Sheraton Grand Chicago Riverwalk.

The daily convention themes: “For the People,” is up first.

SPOTTED — at the New England delegate welcome party in Chicago: Massachusetts Gov. Maura Healey (rocking the Massachusetts delegation's custom Converse and taking pictures with delegates); Secretary of State Bill Galvin (wearing sneakers, but not the Chucks); MassDems Chair Steve Kerrigan (wearing the Chucks), state Rep. Kate Donaghue; state Sen. Marc Pacheco; Tara Healey, Sam Gebru, and Joe Caiazzo; and from New Hampshire, Democratic strategist Jim Demers and state Sen. Donna Soucy.

 

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DATELINE BEACON HILL

“Mass. Lottery looks to other states for path forward online,” by Rebeca Pereira, GBH News.

“State plans to temporarily take over St. Elizabeth's as most Steward hospitals go to new owners,” by Katie Lannan, GBH News: “Gov. Maura Healey intends to take control of St. Elizabeth’s Hospital in Brighton through an eminent domain process to keep it open and transition the facility to a new owner, she announced Friday. St. Elizabeth’s is one of five Massachusetts hospitals up for sale by its bankrupt owner, Steward Health Care. Healey said agreements have been reached — but not yet finalized — to transfer the other four hospitals to new owners. … Under the deals that Healey said will be finalized ‘in short order,’ Boston Medical Center will eventually take over both St. Elizabeth’s and Brockton’s Good Samaritan Hospital. Lawrence General Hospital will purchase the Haverhill and Methuen campuses of Holy Family Hospital, and Lifespan will assume operations at Morton Hospital in Taunton and St. Anne’s in Fall River.”

Several Boston-area politicians still aren’t fully satisfied with the plan. Members of the Boston City Council were quick to call on the state to take similar action to keep open Carney Hospital in Dorchester, and in a joint statement over the weekend Democratic Reps. Stephen Lynch and Ayanna Pressley released a joint statement calling on the state to “move with the same level of urgency to keep Carney Hospital in Dorchester open as well.”

Meanwhile, the Wall Street Journal’s Jonathan Weil digs into how Steward CEO Ralph de la Torre made his millions as his company crashed. 

MIGRANTS IN MASSACHUSETTS

“Reprieves continue for many migrant families facing ouster from overflow shelter system,” by Laura Crimaldi, Helena Getahun-Hawkins, Natalie La Roche Pietri and Camilo Fonseca, The Boston Globe.

“Immigrant advocates call for end of ICE contract with Plymouth jail,” by Sean Cotter, The Boston Globe: “The Plymouth County Correctional Facility has remained the only detention center in the state to hold federal immigration detainees, in spite of allegations of inhumane conditions there. If anything, the immigration detention unit has grown in recent years, even as others have closed. But now, as federal authorities are negotiating a possible contract extension with the facility, immigrant-rights advocates have fired off a new series of concerns of unsanitary conditions and abuse toward the detainees, and have called for the unit’s closure.”

“New Bedford credit union removes roadblock for immigrants,” by Gerardo Beltran Salinas, The New Bedford Light: “The South Coast Federal Credit Union in New Bedford is making it easier for immigrants to open accounts by eliminating the requirement that customers have a social security number."

BUMPY BUS BUDGET — Stoughton is facing a school bus shortage thanks to budget constraints, leaving 150 students to find another way to get to class, the Boston Herald’s Matthew Medsger reports. While new families have moved into emergency shelter space in the town, Stoughton Superintendent Joseph Baeta assured parents in a letter that the expected gap in service isn’t directly impacted by the bus service the state is funding for the students housed there.

“The district has two buses for students living in hotels/shelters … We are utilizing funding the state provides to the district to bus the students living in hotels/shelters,” Baeta wrote. “The funding for these two buses does not come from our operational budget. It is inaccurate to suggest that these children receiving busing is the reason yours did not. If we were not receiving the funding from the state for the students living in hotels/shelters, we would not be able to have these two additional buses.”

But “an increase in PreK-12 enrollment, including in our migrant student population, and unprecedented pressures in special education, transportation, and services for English Learners,” are among the financial pressures impacting the overall budget, Baeta said in a letter in March.

 

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YAHD SIGNS AND BUMPAH STICKAHS

“Massachusetts GOP Senate candidates differ on Trump, border and how they'll take on Elizabeth Warren,” by Jon Keller, CBS Boston: “The three Republicans competing for the right to take on Sen. Elizabeth Warren in a fight for Massachusetts's U.S. Senate seat debated which of them was a ‘real’ Republican rather than a ‘RINO’ - Republican In Name Only.”

“Boston sends out early voting flyers with wrong dates, prompting complaint from candidate,” by Gayla Cawley, Boston Herald.

“3 seek open Middlesex North register of deeds seat on Democratic primary ticket,” by Peter Currier, The Lowell Sun: “For the first time in nearly three decades, the seat for Middlesex North register of deeds is truly up for grabs after Richard Howe announced last year that he would not seek reelection, and three candidates are competing in the Sept. 3 Democratic primary to be his successor."

“Few decisions on Sept. 3 primary ballot,” by Scott Merzbach, Daily Hampshire Gazette: “With mail-in ballots already out to voters and early in-person voting to commence across the state on Saturday, Aug. 24, most voters throughout Hampshire County, southern Franklin County and Holyoke, unless participating in the GOP state primary, will not have any electoral decisions to make.”

FIRST IN PLAYBOOK — The North Atlantic States Regional Council of Carpenters has endorsed state Rep. Bill Driscoll in the race for the open Norfolk, Plymouth and Bristol District state Senate seat, as well as Tony King, who’s running for the 7th Norfolk District House seat Driscoll is vacating.

The Massachusetts and Northern New England Laborers' District Council is endorsing former Methuen City Councilor Eunice Zeigler for Governor's Council in District 5.

IT'S NOT EASY BEING GREEN

“Nantucket Select Board no fan of federal wind farm regulator,” by Bruce Mohl, CommonWealth Beacon: “The Nantucket Select Board has released what might be described as a dispatch from the front lines of offshore wind development, a hot take on what it’s like to be a municipality trying to co-exist with the nation’s first industrial-scale wind farm.”

THE LOCAL ANGLE

“Central Mass. firefighters join crew battling wildfires in Idaho,” by Marco Cartolano, Telegram & Gazette.

 

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WHAT ELSE YOU SHOULD BE READING

“Some Mass. county jails have millions in profits off inmates sitting in accounts,” by Hadley Barndollar, MassLive: “An inmate canteen fund is financed by the often double-digit percentage markups placed on commissary goods, such as snacks, drinks, postage or clothing, that inmates purchase from what are essentially convenience stores inside correctional facilities. … A review by MassLive of fiscal year 2023 data shows out of the state’s 13 county jails overseen by sheriff’s departments, five counties — Bristol, Essex, Norfolk, Suffolk and Worcester — had canteen accounts over $1 million. Two of them had funds over $2 million.”

“Springfield minister to head national voting initiative,” by Dave Canton, The Springfield Republican.

HEARD ‘ROUND THE BUBBLAH

SPOTTED —  At the Hewins Street Block Party: hosts state Rep. Chris Worrell and Boston City Councilor Brian Worrell; Sen. Ed Markey, Rep. Ayanna Pressley, Boston Mayor Michelle Wu, Boston City Council President Ruthzee Louijeune, Councilors John FitzGerald and Erin Murphy, Newton City Councilor Martha Bixby, former Boston City Councilor Frank Baker and New England Patriots Foundation President Josh Kraft.

HAPPY BIRTHDAY — to Trey McNinch, Winslow Eliot and John Sasso. 

Want to make an impact? POLITICO Massachusetts has a variety of solutions available for partners looking to reach and activate the most influential people in the Bay State. Have a petition you want signed? A cause you’re promoting? Seeking to increase brand awareness among this key audience? Share your message with our influential readers to foster engagement and drive action. Contact Jesse Shapiro to find out how: jshapiro@politico.com.

 

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